New Residential Tenancy Act Updates: What You Need to Know
May 10, 2025
Canada is facing one of the most significant housing shortages since the Second World War. Mark Carney unveiled the Liberal Party’s boldest housing strategy in generations — a plan that could reshape the landscape for homeowners, renters, landlords, and investors alike.
🏗️ Introducing “Build Canada Homes” (BCH)
At the heart of Carney’s proposal is a new federal agency called Build Canada Homes (BCH). BCH will aim to double Canada’s current residential construction rate, targeting 500,000 new homes per year over the next decade. BCH will:
Build housing at scale on public and acquired lands.
Provide $25B in low-interest loans and $1B in equity for innovative prefab/modular housing manufacturers.
Invest $10B in low-cost capital to support deeply affordable, Indigenous, seniors, and student housing.
Standardize building designs and accelerate permit timelines across the country.
This shift echoes Canada’s post-WWII housing efforts, when rapid public intervention delivered homes for veterans. Today, the goal is to help younger Canadians and vulnerable populations access affordable housing again.
Whether you're a landlord, tenant, or investor, here's how the plan could impact your housing experience:
Development fees halved for multi-unit residential housing for five years — this could save $40,000+ per unit in places like Toronto.
Return of the Multiple Unit Rental Building (MURB) incentive — spurred 200,000 rental units in the 70s.
Tax breaks for selling rental buildings to non-profits, if proceeds are reinvested in new rentals.
Faster building approvals and streamlined regulations for modular homes and sustainable construction.
More purpose-built rentals are expected, especially near transit corridors and urban centers.
Greater access to affordable units, including student, senior, and supportive housing.
Government commitments to end encampments and enhance Housing First programs with provinces and territories.
Bulk federal orders for prefab units will create stable demand.
More apprenticeship opportunities and skilled trade jobs.
National standardization of the Building Code and public reporting of municipal permit progress.
The plan also prioritizes green building practices — leveraging Canadian softwood lumber, recycled materials, and low-emission technologies — a step that aligns with long-term climate and affordability goals.
At Cityplex, we welcome this renewed focus on housing and infrastructure. More investment, clearer regulatory pathways, and new rental stock will create opportunities for our clients to grow portfolios, access housing more affordably, and benefit from a modernized rental market.
We will continue to monitor developments as the plan evolves — and keep you updated on how funding, zoning, and financing shifts may affect local properties and investment decisions here in British Columbia.
📍Stay Informed with Cityplex
To learn more about how these policy changes could impact your property or housing search, visit us at www.cityplex.ca or contact your property manager today.